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korraisnottan:

dat-shit-schway:

So I was looking up Korra cosplay and i noticed this girl had used makeup to attempt to make her skin tone match Korra’s…and this is what she put in the description. I am not sure why this irritated me so much.


I’m not sure if its the fact that she said “No one else who cosplayed seemed to achieve the exact rich skin tone“ as if people who actually are Korra’s color have never cosplayed as Korra before…and the fact that she believes that brown skin is something that you can easily "achieve” by plastering on make-up and it will basically look like you actually have brown skin (which in fact it does not). :I

Ah. Idk. Its 1 AM and this irritated me. Thats what I get for looking up cosplay.

Deedee:

I have not made much commentary on this blog because plain and simple I’m tired. But I haven’t fully given up on working on it so here I am. 

This is exactly why many people have problems with light skinned people cosplaying as Korra. 

“No one else who cosplayed seemed to achieve the exact rich skin tone“ as if people who actually are Korra’s color have never cosplayed as Korra before…

You are right. They are acting like someone of Korra’s tone hasn’t cosplayed as Korra. There are a lot of brown skin folk that are REALLY happy about her design, her character, her outfit and her skin tone that they don’t feel out of place cosplaying because skin tones match. 

That isn’t to say you have to cosplay as only characters of your skin tone. But if you’ve never felt left out, or if you’ve never had to read about someone fetishing your skintone in this way “lovely milk chocolate color” then you don’t understand the isolation of being the odd man out in the cosplay world. 

This is disgusting, thank you for point this out 

Dear white cosplayers

yamino:

I have several friends/acquaintances who are white and also cosplay! And there is nothing wrong with that.  Unfortunately, I’ve seen some popular cosplayers I admire put on “brownface” to cosplay characters like Korra, Katara, and other people of color.  That is not ok.  What seems like innocent dressup to you is a tradition rooted in racism which dehumanises real people of color.  Skintone is not a costume. 

There’s a cosplayer I used to follow who has been doing this a lot lately.  I have sent them private messages explaining why that was hurtful to people of color in the past, when I saw them giving tips on “how to tan to look like Korra.”  My messages to them were ignored.  I have seen friends of mine who pose with them, condone it, and turn a blind eye. In a way I did that myself after my messages were ignored, I just quietly unfollowed because I couldn’t support it but I didn’t want to call them out publicly and cause a huge fuss.  But these cosplayers and former friends of mine are  still doing it, and I’m getting asks about it, saying “I know you are a huge fan of so-and-so! Why aren’t you commenting on their brownface?”

So I’m making this post now to help clarify the brownface issue for white cosplayers who Don’t Get It, if they would actually read about this instead of ignoring those who bring it up to them.

Because I am a myself a white person, I’m really not the best spokesperson for brownface and whitewashing. Instead, I’ll like to some posts from PoC that explain why slathering on fake tan or makeup to look darker is racist:

If you are a cosplayer who does or has done brownface, that is bad and you should feel bad.  But there is a silver lining.  Now you know!  And you can change for the better.  Nobody is saying you can’t cosplay characters like Korra- just stop wearing her skin color as part of your costume.

And if you have white friends who cosplay using brownface, talk to them about it.  Show them this post. Show them them the brownface tag. Don’t just turn a blind eye to systematic racism.